Quick Facts
FONT-SIZE Plus   Neg
Share SHARE
mail  E-MAIL

Jaguar Mining Chairman Gary German Resigns; Richard Falconer Named Replacement

6/29/2012 5:17 PM ET

Jaguar Mining Inc. (JAG.TO: Quote, JAG) said Friday that its Chairman Gary German has stepped down from the position. The company has appointed Richard Falconer as the new Chairman.

Falconer is a member of Jaguar's board of directors. Prior to that, he worked at CIBC World Markets Inc., where he retired after 40 years of service as Vice Chairman and Managing Director. He is also currently serving as a Director for Resolute Forest Products, Chorus Aviation, Inc., the Bridgepoint Health Foundation and LOFT Community Services.

The company also noted that the six directors nominated by management were elected in the annual general meeting. However, the nominees Andrews, Clausen and German received more "withheld" votes than votes "for."

Despite Jaguar's majority voting policy not applying to contested director elections, following the meeting, Andrews, Clausen and German offered up their resignation from the Board of Directors.

Jaguar is continuing its active search for a permanent Chief Executive Officer, and expects to make an appointment during the third quarter. The interim CEO John Andrews will continue in the position until the new appointment is made.

Click here to receive FREE breaking news email alerts for Jaguar Mining Inc. and others in your portfolio

by RTT Staff Writer

For comments and feedback: editorial@rttnews.com

Business News

Quick Facts

Editors Pick
A leading indicator of Chinese economic activity rose marginally in May and at a slower pace than a month earlier, suggesting more sluggish growth for the overall economy in the months ahead. The Conference Board said that its leading economic indicator rose 0.3 percent month-on-month in May, slower than a 1.5 percent increase in April. Only three of the six components contributed positively. While lingering worries about the outlook for the Federal Reserve's stimulus program generated some selling pressure in afternoon trading on Monday, stocks managed to end the day mostly higher after seeing an early rally on the heels of some upbeat economic data. The major averages finished the session well off their best levels of the day but still posted strong gains. In an apparent backlash from the numerous scandals facing the administration, the results of a new CNN/ORC International survey released Monday showed a sharp drop in President Barack Obama's approval rating. The poll found that 45 percent of Americans approve of the way Obama is handling his job as president, down from 53 percent in a poll conducted last month.
FREE Newsletters, Analysis & Alerts

 

Stay informed with our FREE daily Newsletters and real-time breaking News Alerts. Sign up to receive the latest information on business news, health, technology, biotech, market analysis, currency trading and more.